Clifford Webb

Clifford Webb (14 March 1894 – 29 July 1972) was an English artist, illustrator and author: RBA 1936, RE 1948.

He was apprenticed as a lithographer, but served in the British Army (Wiltshire Regiment) during World War I and then studied at the Westminster School of Art. He fought at Mons, Gallipoli and in Mesopotamia. He was wounded four times and mentioned in despatches. Between 1917-1919, he served as a captain in the Indian Army.

From 1919-1922, he studied at the Westminster School of Art under Walter Bayes and Bernard Meninsky and then from 1923-26 he was a part-time lecturer at Central School of Art in Birmingham.

He specialised in animal drawings, and also produced the illustrations for the first two books of the Swallows and Amazons series by Arthur Ransome; initially for the second edition of Swallows and Amazons (as Ransome did not like the illustrations produced for the first edition by Steven Spurrier, which were not used apart from the endpaper map and the dust jacket). Webb also illustrated the second book, Swallowdale. Ransome then illustrated Peter Duck, the third and all subsequent books himself, and in 1938 Ransome produced illustrations for later editions of Swallows and Amazons and Swallowdale replacing Webb's drawings.[1] Issue 67 of The Imaginative Book Illustration Society's Studies in Illustration contains a short biography & full bibliography by Martin Steenson.

Webb wrote and illustrated children’s books,

  • The Story of Noah
  • The Thirteenth Pig 1965
  • Butterwick Farm 1933
  • Animals from Everywhere 1938
  • More Animals from Everywhere 1959
  • The Story of Noah 1931
  • A Jungle Picnic 1934
  • The North Pole Before Lunch 1936
  • The Friendly Place 1962
  • Magic Island
  • Strange Creatures 1963
  • All Kinds of Animals 1970

His wife Ella Monckton authored a number of books which he illustrated:

  • For the Moon
  • The Little Clown
  • Dog Toby
  • The Boy and the Mountain
  • The Top of the Mountain
  • The Gates Family
  • The Go-To-Bed book 1935

He also illustrated other books;

  • Swallow and Amazons: Arthur Ransome, 1930
  • Swallowdale : Arthur Ransome, 1931
  • An Introduction to India : E. Lucia Turnbull 1933
  • A Key to the Countryside : Marcus Woodward 1934
  • A Surgeon's China : Albert Gervais 1934
  • Words Beasts and Fishes : Marmaduke Dixey 1936
  • The Hill Fox : Ernest Blakeman Vesey 1937
  • Under the Chesnut Tree : Ida Gandy 1938
  • Creatures Great and Small: Theodora Horton 1938
  • The Gentle Art of Walking : Geoffrey Murray, 1939
  • The Pig who was too thin : Margaret Alleyne 1946
  • The Enchanted Glen : Beatrice Carroll 1947
  • Moss Green Days : Ralph Wightman 1952

References

  1. Hunt, Peter (1992). Approaching Arthur Ransome. London: Jonathan Cape Ltd. p. 62. ISBN 0-224-03288-7.
  • Who was Who, 1971-1980 (1981, A & C Black, London)
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